As I've mentioned before, though I thoroughly disapprove of these sorts of challenges, questionnaires and other group divulgence endeavours, I also can't quite resist them either. So, while I'm not fully engaging the blog hop challenge, there are a couple of items on the list that I can't pass up. So please sit tight and listen up, I'm about to tell you the fascinating tale of the death of...
Elfrandel the Executor
He was my first ever
AD&D character, a high octane elven fighter/ranger/magic user/thief/assassin/bard or somesuch insane combination of classes. It was the end of summer 1981, 7th grade was only a few days away, and I had been bowing out of D&D sessions with the gang for the last month. The combination of our hack 'n slash approach to dungeon creation and the omni-classed elves that everyone was running at the time had rendered gaming sessions into tedious dice-rolling marathons.
But, I was starting to do other things instead of playing D&D, including joining the soccer (futbol) team. On the first day of soccer practice I came home with a pain in my leg that would turn out to be a season-ending stress fracture, and was unceremoniously informed by my brother that my character, Elfrandel the Executioner, had bit the big one. I wasn't even there for the event. I assumed even then that the rest of the players had just gotten tired of running my dude for me and let me have it. And I didn't really mind that the character was dead--I don't even think I asked how he met his end.
What
did bug me is that they were essentially telling me that my D&D membership had lapsed, I was out of the club. Even though I'd been skipping out for half the summer, that had been
me bailing on them, but now that they made it definitive, yeah, I was kind of hurt. But, even though my soccer career didn't even last until school officially started, I still found plenty to do to entertain myself in junior high. I was a class representative on the school social committee, "played" on the basketball team, though I shot 0% from the field for the entire season, was active in my church youth group(?!), served as a stage hand for the drama club (!?!), and even dipped my toes into the turbid waters of adolescent dating (!!???!); all kinds of crap that I can't imagine was ever a part of my being. So in response to how did I handle the death of my first character? I went out and got a life.
Obviously, however, D&D and I were not finished with each other and it was the nexus of two events that changed the course of history: Christmas and puberty. That year my mom, blissfully unaware that my D&D "phase" had been over for many months, got me a load of random D&D accessories, including the World of Greyhawk Folio. The map and gazetteer suddenly grounded D&D in its own world, much like all the shoddy fantasy literature that I'd been devouring for the last year. It gave D&D a big picture beyond wandering from town to town in search of dungeons so that we could wander from room to room in search of slaughter. It gave us an idea of what to do with our high level characters. I was re-hooked.
As for the puberty part, while poring over all my new D&D booty, my height doubled to 8-foot-4 overnight [I trust that my readership will surmise that a
Hyperbole Alert is in full effect]. I became a moody prick, distanced myself from most of that extra-curricular crap, let my grades slide, and took a step back from the female of the species for next 4 years. Instead, I re-focussed my energies on D&D. And comic books.
In the winter of 1982, while keeping abreast of the X-men's dealings with the Krull, the Marvel's "Contest of Champions" and all the other important goings-on of the Marvel-verse, I churned out nearly 3,000 unfinished dungeons, filled out twice as many character sheets, [again with the hyperbole alert] and meticulously devoured every other word of the AD&D rulebooks; I had transformed myself into a sort of D&D golem using my newfound wisdom to finally crack the code of the enigmatic "percentile dice" that had befuddled our gaming to this point.
Actually, scrap all that. Now that I think of it,
Krasdale the Lizard Man died in action in July of 1981, pre-deceasing Elsinore by more than a month. How did I handle it? I let fly a series of expletives, including my first ever use of the f-bomb.